Centre de coopération Internationale de la Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (CIRAD), UMR Amap, Kourou, France.
Botany and Modelling of Plant Architecture and Vegetation (Amap), Université Montpellier, CIRAD, CNRS, INRA, IRD, Montpellier, France.
Ann Bot. 2018 Apr 18;121(5):773-795. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcx194.
More than a half century ago, Shinozaki et al. (Shinozaki K, Yoda K, Hozumi K, Kira T. 1964a. A quantitative analysis of plant form - the pipe model theory. I. Basic analyses. Japanese Journal of Ecology B: 97-105) proposed an elegant conceptual framework, the pipe model theory (PMT), to interpret the observed linear relationship between the amount of stem tissue and corresponding supported leaves. The PMT brought a satisfactory answer to two vividly debated problems that were unresolved at the moment of its publication: (1) What determines tree form and which rules drive biomass allocation to the foliar versus stem compartments in plants? (2) How can foliar area or mass in an individual plant, in a stand or at even larger scales be estimated? Since its initial formulation, the PMT has been reinterpreted and used in applications, and has undoubtedly become an important milestone in the mathematical interpretation of plant form and functioning.
This article aims to review the PMT by going back to its initial formulation, stating its explicit and implicit properties and discussing them in the light of current biological knowledge and experimental evidence in order to identify the validity and range of applicability of the theory. We also discuss the use of the theory in tree biomechanics and hydraulics as well as in functional-structural plant modelling.
Scrutinizing the PMT in the light of modern biological knowledge revealed that most of its properties are not valid as a general rule. The hydraulic framework derived from the PMT has attracted much more attention than its mechanical counterpart and implies that only the conductive portion of a stem cross-section should be proportional to the supported foliage amount rather than the whole of it. The facts that this conductive portion is experimentally difficult to measure and varies with environmental conditions and tree ontogeny might cause the commonly reported non-linear relationships between foliage and stem metrics. Nevertheless, the PMT can still be considered as a portfolio of properties providing a unified framework to integrate and analyse functional-structural relationships.
半个多世纪前,Shinozaki 等人(Shinozaki K、Yoda K、Hozumi K、Kira T. 1964a. 植物形态的定量分析——管道模型理论。I. 基础分析。日本生态学杂志 B:97-105)提出了一个优雅的概念框架,即管道模型理论(PMT),以解释观察到的茎组织量与相应支撑叶片之间的线性关系。PMT 对当时悬而未决的两个激烈争论的问题给出了令人满意的答案:(1)是什么决定了树木的形态,以及哪些规则驱动生物量分配到植物的叶片和茎部?(2)如何在个体植物、林分或更大的尺度上估计叶片面积或质量?自最初提出以来,PMT 已经被重新解释和应用,并无疑成为植物形态和功能数学解释的重要里程碑。
本文旨在通过追溯其最初的表述来回顾 PMT,阐述其显式和隐式特性,并根据当前的生物学知识和实验证据对其进行讨论,以确定该理论的有效性和适用范围。我们还讨论了该理论在树木生物力学和水力学以及功能结构植物建模中的应用。
用现代生物学知识仔细审查 PMT 表明,其大多数特性都不是普遍适用的规则。源自 PMT 的水力框架比其机械对应物更受关注,这意味着只有茎横截面的传导部分应该与支撑的叶片数量成正比,而不是整个横截面。实际上,这个传导部分很难测量,并且会随着环境条件和树木的个体发育而变化,这可能导致通常报告的叶片和茎度量之间的非线性关系。尽管如此,PMT 仍然可以被视为一组属性,为整合和分析功能结构关系提供了一个统一的框架。